A decade after the infamous “Downing Street Memo” and its “fixed”
intelligence for invading Iraq, the pressure is on again to make the
case – whatever the facts – for a new war with Iran. Will the UK’s MI6
and the CIA bend again or hold firm, ask ex-intelligence analysts Annie
Machon and Ray McGovern.
By Annie Machon and Ray McGovern
Recent remarks by Sir John Sawers, who heads Britain’s MI6 (the
Secret Intelligence Service that is Britain’s CIA counterpart), leave us
wondering if Sawers is preparing to “fix” intelligence on Iran, as his
immediate predecessor, Sir John Scarlett, did on Iraq.
Scarlett’s pre-Iraq war role in creating “dodgy dossiers” hyping the
threat of non-existent “weapons of mass destruction” is relatively well
known. On July 4, the red warning light for politicization was again
flashing brightly in London, as Sawers told British senior civil
servants that Iran is “two years away” from becoming a “nuclear weapons state.” How did Sawers come up with “two years?”
British
Prime Minister Tony Blair and U.S. President George W. Bush shake hands
after a joint White House press conference on Nov. 12, 2004. (White
House photo by Paul Morse)
Since late 2007, the benchmark for weighing Iran’s nuclear program has been the unanimous assessment by all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies that Iran halted its nuclear
weapons program in late 2003 and that, as of mid-2007, had not restarted
it. Those judgments have been revalidated every year since, despite
strong pressure to bow to more ominous — but evidence-starved —
assessments by Israel and its neo-conservative supporters.
The 2007 U.S. National Intelligence Estimate helped thwart plans to
attack Iran in 2008, the last year of the Bush/Cheney
administration. This shines through in George Bush’s own memoir, Decision Points, in
which he rues the NIE’s “eye-popping declaration: ‘We judge with high
confidence that in fall 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear weapons
program.’”
Bush continues, “But after the NIE, how could I possibly explain
using the military to destroy the nuclear facilities of a country the
intelligence community said had no active nuclear weapons program?” (Decision Points, p. 419)
Hands tied on the military side, U.S. covert operations flowered,
with $400 million appropriated at that same time for a major escalation
of the dark-side struggle against Iran, according to military,
intelligence, and congressional sources cited by Seymour Hersh in 2008.
The clandestine but all-too-real war on Iran has included attacks
with computer viruses, the murders of Iranian scientists, and what the
Israelis call the “unnatural” demise of senior officials like
Revolutionary Guards Major General Hassan Moghaddam, father of Iran’s
missile program.
Moghaddam was killed in a large explosion last November, with Time magazine citing a “western intelligence source” as saying the Israel’s
Mossad was behind the blast. More threatening still to Iran are the
severe economic sanctions laid upon it, sanctions which are tantamount
to an act of war.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and pro-Israel
neo-conservatives in the U.S. and elsewhere have been pushing hard for
an attack on Iran, seizing every pretext they can find. Netanyahu was
suspiciously fast off the blocks, for example, in claiming that Iran was
behind the tragic terrorist bombing of Israeli tourists in Bulgaria on
July 18, despite Bulgarian authorities and even the White House warning
that it is too early to attribute responsibility.
Netanyahu’s instant indictment of Iran strongly suggests he is
looking for excuses to up the ante. With the Persian Gulf looking like
an accident waiting to happen, stocked as it is with warships from the
U.S., the U.K. and elsewhere — and with no fail-safe way of
communicating with Iranian naval commanders — an escalation-generating
accident or provocation is now more likely than ever.
July 23, a Day of Infamy
Oddly, Sawers’s speech of July 4 came just as an important date
approached — the tenth anniversary of a sad day for British and U.S.
intelligence on Iraq. On July 23, 2002 at a meeting at 10 Downing
Street, then-MI6 head, John Dearlove, briefed Prime Minister Tony Blair and other senior officials on his talks with
his American counterpart, CIA Director George Tenet, in Washington three
days before.
In the official minutes of that briefing (now known as the Downing Street Memo), which were leaked to the London Times and published on May 1, 2005, Dearlove explains that George Bush has
decided to attack Iraq and the war was to be “justified by the
conjunction of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction.”
When then-Foreign Secretary Jack Straw points out that the case was
“thin,” Dearlove explains matter-of-factly, “The intelligence and facts
are being fixed around the policy.”
There is no sign in the minutes that anyone hiccupped — much less demurred — at making a case for war and furthering Blair’s determination to join Bush in launching the kind
of “war of aggression” outlawed by the Nuremberg Tribunal after World
War II and by the United Nations Charter.
Helped by the acquiescence of its chief spies, the Blair government
mainlined into the body politic un-assessed, raw intelligence and forged
documents, with disastrous consequences for the world.
UK citizens were spoon-fed fake intelligence in the September Dossier (2002) and then, just six weeks before the attack on Iraq, the “Dodgy Dossier,” based largely on a 12-year old PhD thesis culled from the Internet — all presented by spy and politician alike as ominous premonitory intelligence.
So was made the case for war. All lies, resulting in hundreds of
thousands dead and maimed and millions of Iraqis displaced — yet no one
held to account.
Sir Richard Dearlove, who might have prevented this had he had the
integrity to speak out, was allowed to retire with full honors and
became the Master of a Cambridge college. John Scarlett, who as chair of
the Joint Intelligence Committee signed off on the fraudulent dossiers,
was rewarded with the top spy job at MI6 and a knighthood. George W.
Bush gave George Tenet the Presidential Medal of Freedom — the highest
civilian award.
What need have we for further proof? “So are they all, all honorable
men” — reminiscent of those standing with Brutus in Shakespeare’s play,
but with no Mark Antony to expose them and stir the appropriate popular
reaction.
Therein lies the problem: instead of being held accountable, these
“honorable men” were, well, honored. Their soft landings offer a noxious
object lesson for ambitious bureaucrats who are ready to play fast and
loose with the truth and trim their sails to the prevailing winds.
Ill-begot honors offer neither deterrent nor disincentive to current
and future intelligence chiefs tempted to follow suit and corrupt
intelligence rather than challenge their political leaders with hard,
un-“fixed” facts. Integrity? In this milieu integrity brings one knowing
smirks rather than honors. And it can get you kicked out of the club.
Fixing Intelligence on Iran
Are we in for another round of “fixing” — this time on Iran? We may
know soon. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, citing the terrorist attack
in Bulgaria, has already provided what amounts to a variation on
Dearlove’s ten-year-old theme regarding how war can be “justified by the
conjunction of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction.”
According to the Jerusalem Post on July 17, Netanyahu said all countries that understand that Iran is an exporter of world terror
must join Israel in “stating that fact clearly,” in order to emphasize
the importance of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
Appearing on CBS’s Face the Nation on Sunday as well as on Fox News Sunday, Netanyahu returned to that theme. Blaming the July 18 terrorist attack
in Bulgaria on Hezbollah supported by Iran, he asked TV viewers to
imagine what would happen if the world’s most dangerous regime got the
world’s most dangerous weapons.
This has too familiar a ring. Has it been just ten years?
Will MI6 chief Sawers model his conduct today on that of his
predecessors who, ten years ago, “justified” war on Iraq? Will he “fix”
intelligence around U.K./U.S./Israeli policy on Iran? Parliamentary
overseers should demand a briefing from Sawers forthwith, before
erstwhile bulldog Britain is again dragged like a poodle into another
unnecessary war.
Annie Machon is a former intelligence officer in the UK’s MI5
Security Service (the U.S. counterpart is the FBI), and Ray McGovern is
a former U.S. Army Intelligence officer and CIA analyst. [To see Annie
Machon and Ray McGovern discuss this issue on TheRealNews, click here.]